Writers Behaving Badly

13:30 – 15:30/FREE

Friday 1 July

13:30 – 15:30

Bronte/ Bâ Room A

A creative writing workshop (focusing primarily on poetry) that will encourage you to examine and challenge perceived norms, and provide support in engaging with themes and experiences that people often have difficulty writing about. Open to writers 18-25 of all abilities.

Jacob Sam-La Rose writes, performs and makes literature projects happen. He’s celebrated as an indefatigable facilitator of international renown, and his poetry has been described as “vivid, masterly and carefully structured.”

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There is one week left to take advantage of £12 early bird tickets for Celebrating Buchi Emecheta on 3rd Feb 2018 at SOAS, University of London! Make sure you secure tickets before 20 December: buff.ly/2z8SpYP... See MoreSee Less

Don't miss our Film Africa screening of the highly contentious South African propaganda film 'De Voortrekkers' - the country's oldest surviving film - at The Castle Cinema this Saturday, 9 November, 2PM, with an amazing score by celebrated composer Juwon Ogungbe. The film is screening as part of the nation-wide Africa's Lost Classics season, a showcase of classic/cult African films rescued from obscurity, damage or suppression to be brought to UK screens. This is the final screening in the season, so grab your tickets now! Spaces are limited and advance booking is highly recommended: bit.ly/2AwP6JS #AfricasLostClassics ... See MoreSee Less

De Voortrekkers + LIVE SCORE by Juwon Ogungbe

December 9, 2017, 2:00pm - December 9, 2017, 9:00am

DE VOORTREKKERS [Harold Shaw | South Africa 1916 | 54 min]
+ LIVE SCORE performed by acclaimed Nigerian composer Juwon Ogungbe.
This 1916 epic is the oldest surviving South African feature film, comparable in scope and problematic politics to Griffith's Birth of a Nation.
It tells the story of the Boers' Great Trek, concluding with a reconstruction of the horrific 1838 Battle of Blood River, where a few hundred armed Afrikaners defeated several thousand Zulus.
Commemorating as it did the Afrikaners' view of a highly contentious period of history, the film came to be revered by the Afrikaner nation at the time.
While we recognise its problematic politics, this rare film has its place in the Africa's Lost Classics programme.
This screening is part of AiM's focus on Africa's Lost Classics, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)
£5/8/10

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About Africa Writes

Africa Writes is the Royal African Society’s annual literature festival. Every year we showcase established and emerging talent from the African continent and its diaspora in what is now the UK’s biggest celebration of contemporary African writing taking place over an exciting summer weekend. The festival features book launches, readings, author appearances, panel discussions, youth and children’s workshops, and other activities